Anjou follows Mendelson around
Borough Park, his old neighborhood in
Brooklyn. Mendelson, who carries a
tuning fork with him at all times, is prone to burst into song. During their journey through Borough Park, Anjou finds that the neighborhood has a fair number of
bakers with vocal talents as good as their
knishes. Mendelson also recalls when cantors were as popular as baseball players. "They had groupies," he tells Anjou, a strong incentive for a chubby teenager in high school. Mendelson's mother, who had been diagnosed with
bipolar disorder, was almost obsessed that her son become a cantor. The film reveals an interesting link to celebrity on the part of Mendelson's father: the older Mendelson once co-owned a truck with the father of
Steven Spielberg. The movie's original title was ''Chazz'n'', after the profiled cantor's sobriquet "Chazzan Jack Mendelson." It has also been titled ''A Cantor's Story''. == Subject ==